BlackBerry co-founder Mike Lazaridis has increased his stake in the struggling
smartphone maker and is considering buying the entire company, according to
a securities filing.

Mr Lazaridis, who now owns 8pc of the company, has hired Goldman Sachs and Centerview Partners to assist with a strategic review of his stake. He held almost 5.7pc at the end of 2012, according to Thomson Reuters data.

The filing said that Mr Lazaridis, who stepped down as co-chief executive and co-chairman of the company in early 2012, made the move along with his fellow co-founder Douglas Fregin.

The pair, who founded the company then known as Research In Motion in 1985, earlier this year started Quantum Valley Investments to support quantum physics and computing breakthroughs.

Such a deal could be an alternative to a preliminary, $9-a-share offer by a group led by BlackBerry's biggest shareholder, Canada's Fairfax.

BlackBerry put itself up for sale in August after lacklustre sales for its new devices.

Sources close to the matter have told Reuters that BlackBerry is in talks with Cisco, Google and Germany's SAP, among others, about selling them all, or parts of itself. The potential buyers have declined to comment.

BlackBerry shares turned positive after the news and were trading at $8.20 on the Nasdaq. The stock has fallen more than 20pc since the company announced a deep loss and sharp fall in revenue in mid-September.